{"id":402,"date":"2011-06-22T15:22:58","date_gmt":"2011-06-22T19:22:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=402"},"modified":"2011-08-02T13:06:34","modified_gmt":"2011-08-02T17:06:34","slug":"dm-excerpts","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=402","title":{"rendered":"dm excerpts"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=398\">table of contents<\/a>  <a href=\"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=400\">reviews<\/a>  <a href=\"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=402\">excerpts<\/a>  <a href=\"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=404\">book discount<\/a>  <a href=\"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=406\">where to buy<\/a>  <a href=\"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=408\">lectures<\/a><\/p>\n<h2><span style=\"color: #ffff99;\"><strong>INTRODUCTION: THE MISSING MASS<\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n<p><em> <\/em><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">Astrophysicists describe <em>dark matter <\/em>(and <em>dark energy<\/em>) as forming an invisible mass predicted by the <em>big bang <\/em>theory,  yet so far only perceived indirectly by observing the motions of  visible, astronomical objects such as stars and galaxies.\u00a0 Despite its  invisibility and unknown constitution, most of the universe, perhaps as  much as 96 percent of it consists of dark matter, a phenomenon sometimes  called the \u201cmissing mass problem.\u201d The gravitational presence of this  unseen force presumably keeps the universe from flying apart. This book  borrows the metaphor of an unknown but ubiquitous stellar mass and  applies it to the world of art and culture. Like its astronomical  cousin, <em>creative dark matter <\/em>also makes up the bulk of the  artistic activity produced in our post-industrial society. However, this  type of dark matter is invisible primarily to those who lay claim to  the management and interpretation of culture \u2013 the critics, art  historians, collectors, dealers, museums, curators, and arts  administrators. It includes makeshift, amateur, informal, unofficial,  autonomous, activist, non-institutional, self-organized practices \u2013 all  work made and circulated in the shadows of the formal art world, some of  which might be said to emulate cultural dark matter by rejecting art  world demands of visibility, and much of which has no choice but to be  invisible. While astrophysicists are eager to know what dark matter is,  the denizens of the art world largely ignore the unseen accretion of  creativity they nevertheless remain dependent upon.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">Consider  the destabilizing impact on high art were some of these hidden producers  to cease or pause their activity. What would happen for example if the  hobbyists and amateurs who purportedly make up a billion-dollar national  industry in the US simply stopped purchasing art supplies or no longer  took classes with \u201cprofessional\u201d artists, or ceased going to museums to  see what bona fide artists do?2 And why consider only the tactical  withdrawal of amateur participation, which is by definition marginal?  What about the dark matter at the heart of the art world itself?  Consider the structural invisibility of most professionally trained  artists whose very underdevelopment is essential to normal artworld  functions. Without this obscure mass of \u201cfailed\u201d artists the small cadre  of successful artists would find it difficult, if not impossible, to  sustain the global art world as it appears today. Without this invisible  mass, the ranks of middle and lower level arts administrators would be  depleted, there would be no one left to fabricate the work of art stars  or to manage their studios and careers. And who would educate the next  generation of artists, disciplining their growing numbers into a system  that mechanically reproduces prolific failure? Furthermore, by  purchasing journals and books, visiting museums and belonging to  professional organizations, these underdeveloped \u201cinvisibles\u201d represent  an essential pillar of the elite art world whose pyramidal structure  looms over them eternally out of reach.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">And yet  there is no material difference between an earnest amateur on one hand,  and a professional artist made invisible by her \u201cfailure\u201d within the art  market on the other; except perhaps that against all the odds she still  hopes to be discovered? How would the art world manage its system of  aesthetic valorization if the seemingly superfluous majority\u2014those  excluded as non-professionals as much as those destined to \u201cfail\u201d\u2014simply  gave up on its system of legitimation? Or if they found an alternative  to it by creating a Peer-to-Peer (P2P) network of support and direct  sales bypassing art dealers, critics, galleries, and curators? Indeed,  to some degree this has already begun to take shape via media  applications of Web 2.0. What has not happened is any move towards  re-distributing the cultural capital bottled up within the holding  company known as high art.\u00a0 All of these forms of dark matter play an  essential role in the symbolic economy of art. Collectively, the amateur  and the failed artist represent a vast flat field upon which a  privileged few stand out in relief. The aim of this book is to raise an  inevitable question: what if we turned this figure and ground relation  inside out by imagining an art world unable to exclude the practices and  practitioners it secretly depends upon? What then would become of its  value structure and distribution of power?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">The answer  is not to imagine the emergence of a more comprehensive social art  history in which the usual art subjects are better contextualized.\u00a0 Nor  is it to take part in some rarified tour of this dark-matter world in  which the mysterious missing cultural mass is acknowledged, ruminated  over, and then re-shelved or archived as a collection of oddities.  Instead, when the excluded are made visible, when they demand  visibility, it is always ultimately a matter of politics and a  rethinking of history. This is often the case with artists\u2019 collectives,  groups, and collaborations whose communal self-embrace inevitably  spotlights the general superfluity of artistic production and producers.  But something has also happened in recent years to that far larger mass  of inert dark matter. It is a change that dramatically alters the  relationship between visible art and its shadowy other, between  professional and amateur, the institution and the archive.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">Dark  matter is getting brighter. And simultaneous with that change in status,  this once missing mass has also been forced to undergo its own  adaptations and mutations. The essays that make up this volume do not  seek to link the growing illumination of imaginative dark-matter  productivity with a market-generated notion of outsider art or some  other facile locus of cultural colonization. Rather, their allegiance is  with those artists who self-consciously choose to work on the outer  margins of the mainstream art world for reasons of social, economic, and  political critique. In a sense, these artists have learned to embrace  their own structural redundancy, they have chosen to be \u201cdark matter.\u201d  By grasping the politics of their own invisibility and marginalization  they inevitably challenge the formation of normative artistic values.  Here \u201cpolitics\u201d must be understood as the imaginative exploration of  ideas, the pleasure of communication, the exchange of education, and the  construction of fantasy, all within a radically defined social-artist  practice. Indeed, such informal, often highly politicized  micro-institutions are proliferating today, and have been growing in  number for the past 15 years at least. This kind of self-organized dark  matter infiltrates high schools, flea markets, public squares, corporate  websites, city streets, housing projects, and local political machines  in ways that do not set out to recover a specific meaning or use-value  for art world discourse or private interests. Which is why the responses  to this growing illumination made so far\u2014including the various  narratives and theoretical attempts to manage dark matter, from the  academicization of public art to relational aesthetics\u2014are no doubt  transitory, and merely part of a greater shift taking place within the  broader cultural paradigm.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">Look again  at the art world and the dark matter it occludes. Few would deny that  the lines separating \u201cdark\u201d and \u201clight\u201d creativity, amateur and  professional, high from low have become arbitrary today, even from the  standpoint of qualities such as talent, vision, and other similarly  mystifying attributes typically assigned to high culture. What can be  said of creative dark matter in general, therefore, is that either by  choice or circumstance it displays a degree of autonomy from the  critical and economic structures of the art world by moving instead  in-between its meshes. It is an antagonistic force simultaneously inside  and outside, like a void within an archive that is itself a kind of  void. But, as I hope to show, the archive has split open, its ragged  contents no longer hidden from view. Still, this growing materiality is  not necessarily a politically progressive event. Increased visibility  not only poses certain risks for any institution that seeks to enclose  it but also\u2014by privileging spontaneity and discontinuity, repetitions  and instability\u2014dark matter can seldom be sustained as a political  force. What proves effective in the short term or locally remains  untested on a larger scale. And that is the point we appear to be  rapidly approaching: an encounter with matters of scale and the need for  a new sustainable political culture of the Left. Dark matter\u2019s missing  cultural mass is both a metaphor for something vast, unnamable and  essentially inert, as well as a phantasmagoric proposition concerning  what might be possible at this moment of epistemological crisis in the  arts and structural crisis in global capital.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">This then  is a book about the politics of invisibility that could only have be  written at a moment when invisibility itself has emerged as a force to  be contended with, or, conversely, a provocation to be selectively  controlled. It is as much dedicated to those who refuse the capture of  their invisibility, as it is to those whose very visibility has been and  continues to be refused. But this is also a study of something else. We  might call it the ubiquitous gaze of the \u201csocial factory\u201d that now  looks back at us tirelessly, unblinkingly, and with an unprecedented  historical hunger. The collision of these visibilities and shadows,  appetites and circumventions defines the spaces of my text, as well as  the very conditions that artists, myself among them, must operate under  within a post-Fordist enterprise culture. And yet, as odd as a book  about invisible artists and artwork may seem, my methods are less  orthodox still.\u00a0 In his essay \u201cThe Author As Producer,\u201d Benjamin called  upon cultural workers to become producers transforming the very means of  their artistic production.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">What follows is my attempt to respond to that call. Throughout these pages I have sought to write <em>tendentiously<\/em>,  in the critically engaged manner proposed by Benjamin, producing, I  hope, a committed work that never disengages from its political core. By  turns it invokes historical research, critical theory, empirical  observation, and journalistic reportage approached from the bottom up,  from the viewpoint of a cultural worker who necessarily labored at  numerous ignoble jobs from janitor, to dishwasher, to industrial  fabricator before becoming a college instructor, all to maintain his  existence as an \u201cartist.\u201d And while these sundry work experiences were  admittedly privileged by gender, ethnicity, and education, they  nonetheless remain deeply instructive for my work and mark this volume  in ways that have sometimes taken its author by surprise.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">This  fundamental identification as a cultural worker leads me to push my  critique of enterprise culture beyond an analysis of representation in  order to examine artists\u2019 working conditions and the power of the  market. It also draws directly from my own history as an artist,  specifically with two artists\u2019 collectives\u2014Political Art  Documentation\/Distribution, or PAD\/D (1980\u201388), and REPOhistory  (1989\u20132000)\u2014both informally structured groups whose relationship to the  art world was, and remains, marginal at best.\u00a0 Finally, whenever  possible, attempts to define art and aesthetics have been avoided.\u00a0 For  obvious reasons an artist is not able to step outside of such discourse  into some detached critical space. Instead, I allow those who claim to  make \u201cart\u201d to define it on their own terms, even if their identification  with the practice is provisional, ironic, or tactical, as for example  when artist Steve Kurtz insists \u201cI\u2019ll call it whatever I have to in  order to communicate with someone.\u201d And perhaps this playful  relationship to the word \u201cart\u201d has its downside, given that Critical Art  Ensemble, the Tactical Media group Kurtz co-founded, has received very  little direct financial support from cultural foundations.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">My aim in  other words is not to separate art from non-art, the rubbish from the  dross, but to examine how these self-defined cultural practices operate  within a changing economy involving material and symbolic rewards and  penalties, visibilities and shadows. I leave it to the reader to decide  if this idiosyncratic approach permits the airing of ideas and histories  that would otherwise remain in the dark. What follows therefore is one  admittedly partial attempt to articulate the politics of this missing  mass.\u00a0 To paraphrase the cosmologists: there is perhaps no current  problem of greater importance to cultural radicals than that of \u201cdark  matter.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\"><strong>Redundancy<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">\u201cWe can  measure the waste of artistic talent,\u201d the art historian Carol Duncan  perceptively observed as early as 1983, \u201cnot only in the thousands of  \u2018failed\u2019 artists\u2014artists whose market failure is necessary to the  success of the few\u2014but also in the millions whose creative potential is  never touched.\u201d Duncan adds that this glut of \u201cart and artists is the  normal condition of the art market.\u201d5 As an artist trying to make my way  through the complexity of New York\u2019s cultural scene in the 1980s her  comments struck me as both accurate and suggestive of an unglimpsed  reality just below the surface. It seemed as though some vaguely visible  structural condition peculiar to contemporary art had briefly flashed  up before me. After several decades of working at being an artist,  political activist, writer, teacher, curator, and founding member of two  political artists\u2019 collectives, Duncan\u2019s comments returned to me with a  vividness that only lived experience can furnish: The oversupply of  artistic labor is an inherent and commonplace feature of artistic  production. Why?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">In preparing this study I reinterpreted the art historian\u2019s remarks as a series of questions. <em>What  do the many, necessarily \u201cfailed\u201d artists, as Duncan calls them,  actually provide to a system that handsomely rewards some of its  participants?<\/em> Artists are educated by the art world to see such  failure as a kind of chaff that must be removed to release a small  nucleus of value. Yet, even this agricultural metaphor reminds us that a  \u201cwasted\u201d husk once protected a valuable seed. Perhaps most importantly,  this creative chaff maintains and reproduces the system\u2019s <em>symbolic <\/em>hierarchies  by exchanging information about the luminaries of the art world at  openings, parties, on blogsites, doing so reflexively, like a vast field  of heliotropic flowers always oriented towards a brightly lit centre.  Even if the soil at the margins of this field is sewn with bitterness,  such gossip reinforces the apparent naturalness of the overall art  economy and its hierarchies. To restate this point with a shift of  metaphors, the artist Martha Rosler was once brazenly informed by an art  dealer that either you\u2019re on the art world \u201ctable\u201d or your not.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">As  peculiar as the cultural economy of fine art may be, there is no getting  around the fact that an increasing number of individuals are choosing  to become artists.7 This is all the more striking given the past 30  years in which a form of deregulated capitalism has dominated the global  economy transforming increasing segments of the population into an  under- or simply un-employed surplus population that exceeds even the  necessary \u201creserve army of labor\u201d essential to the functioning of  capital. So why has art, an inherently precarious activity in the best  of times, actually flourished during this process of competitive global  austerity? Needless to say, the answer appears to lie not strictly  within the art establishment, but is instead part of a broader change in  the status of culture within the neoliberal economy of the past 30  years. For one thing, enterprise culture requires a kind of enforced  creativity that is imposed on all forms of labor. Workers, whose  livelihoods have been made increasingly precarious by the collapse of  the traditional social welfare state, are expected to be forever ready  to retrain themselves at their own expense (or their own debt), to labor  continuously even when at home or on vacation, and finally, they are  expected to be constantly creative, to think like an artist: \u201coutside  the box.\u201d Such universal demand for imagination and innovation  inevitably places added value on forms of \u201ccreativity\u201d previously  dismissed as informal or nonprofessional.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">In a very  tangible sense dark matter is simply not as dark as it recently  appeared. The spread of information technologies including the World  Wide Web directly enhance this process of illumination while expanding  forms of creative economic discipline into the affective and domestic  spheres of human life. As never before, producing, copying, re-mixing,  printing, uploading, and distributing images and information has become  (almost) everyone\u2019s privilege, even their social responsibility. Digital  technology also functions like a prosthetic memory permitting the  excluded to document and narrate ephemeral, everyday activities and  overlooked forms of expression or resistance. As Boris Groys insists, no  one sits in the audience any longer, everyone is on stage.8\u00a0\u00a0 Which  brings me to the third and most important phenomenon and the one this  book is most keen to address\u2014 the way this twin expansion of neoliberal  demand and creative \u201cmining\u201d technology has inevitably led to a kind of  rupture within a vast surplus archive \u201cfrom below,\u201d a vault of pent-up  ideas and desires, hopes and frustrations, littered with odds and ends,  and structured (if that word applies here at all) by narrative gaps and  lacunas. In an age of enterprise culture, when concepts of labor and  class and resistance are being taken apart and put back together again,  it is to this shadow or surplus archive that artistic dissidents and  rebels now look for inspiration on \u201chow to fight.\u201d For what post-Fordist  enterprise culture and its precarious dependency on social networks  have unleashed may not be fully compatible with the kind of giddy,  self-regulating free market idealism digital libertarians have  cheerfully promoted. The new electronic commons might instead be thought  of as the return of an old commons, or, as Blake Stimson and I  proposed: \u201cthe newness of the new e-collectivism, like the newness of  the new Arab street, is only a rebirth of intensity, the welling up of  spirits from the past, a recall to the opportunities and battle lines of  old.\u201d9 This materializing missing mass is no doubt permeated with its  own historical baggage, half-submerged resentments, but also a sense of  anticipation. Under these circumstances, even once formidable modes of  artistic dissent such as institutional critique have become deeply  ambivalent about the role of self-criticism.10\u00a0\u00a0 In a sense, the  once-hidden surplus archive is now eating its host. Or, more precisely,  like some extraterrestrial vegetal pod it is <em>becoming <\/em>its host. But I am getting ahead of things.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #c0c0c0;\">The book  begins by selectively examining politically committed forms of mostly  collaborative art that arose on the cusp of the post-Fordist structural  adjustment of the late 1970s and early 1980s\u2026<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #ffff99;\"><strong>An excerpt from chapter one:<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pgcontents.jpg\"><\/a><a href=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg1.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"dm book pg1\" src=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg1.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"456\" height=\"670\" \/><\/a><a href=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg2.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"dm book pg2\" src=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg2.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"443\" height=\"670\" \/><\/a><a href=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg3.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"dm book pg3\" src=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg3.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"450\" height=\"672\" \/><\/a><a href=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg4.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"dm book pg4\" src=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg4.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"444\" height=\"679\" \/><\/a><a href=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg5.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"dm book pg5\" src=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg5.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"450\" height=\"691\" \/><\/a><a href=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg6.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"dm book pg6\" src=\"..\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/01\/dm-book-pg6.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"446\" height=\"681\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>table of contents reviews excerpts book discount where to buy lectures INTRODUCTION: THE MISSING MASS Astrophysicists describe dark matter (and dark energy) as forming an invisible mass predicted by the big bang theory, yet so far only perceived indirectly by &hellip; <a href=\"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/?page_id=402\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"onecolumn-page.php","meta":{"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-402","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/402","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=402"}],"version-history":[{"count":7,"href":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/402\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":596,"href":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/402\/revisions\/596"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/www.darkmatterarchives.net\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=402"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}